Author/Authors
Gorelick، نويسنده , , Root، نويسنده ,
DocumentNumber
3542430
Title Of Article
Measures of diversity should include both matrix and vector inputs
شماره ركورد
6048
Latin Abstract
Any solution to rising levels of CO2 depends on human behavior. One common approach to changing human behavior is rewarding desired behavior. Because financial incentives often have side effects that diminish efficacy, we predict that social rewards are more effective, because they invoke adherence to descriptive and injunctive social norms. We investigated this by measuring electricity use for 13 weeks at a Dutch firm. Each week, employees were rewarded for conserving energy. They either received monetary rewards (€0–€5) or social rewards (grade points with a descriptive comment). Rewards were either private or public. In both the short and long term, public rewards outperformed private rewards, and social rewards outperformed monetary rewards. This suggests that private monetary rewards, although popular, may be ineffective. Instead, public social rewards may be a more promising approach to stimulating energy conservation. We argue that this approach should be considered more frequently by policy-makers.
From Page
211
NaturalLanguageKeyword
Marginal , Beta-diversity , Information , Coefficient of variation , entropy
JournalTitle
Studia Iranica
To Page
212
To Page
212
Link To Document